Vora Neil
University of California at San Francisco, California, USA.
Medscape J Med. 2008;10(10):238. Epub 2008 Oct 15.
The spread of infectious vector-borne diseases involves at least 3 organisms: a parasite, a vector, and a host. Alterations to the natural environment may change the context within which these entities interact, thus potentially affecting vector-borne disease epidemiology. In this review, examples are presented in which human-driven ecological changes may be contributing to the spread of vector-borne diseases. Such changes include deforestation, agriculture and animal husbandry, water control projects, urbanization, loss of biodiversity, introduction of alien species, and climate change. The global environment is currently being degraded at an alarming pace, potentially placing human populations at increasing risk for unnecessary and preventable outbreaks of vector-borne diseases. Further research is needed to improve our ability to predict and prevent emergence and reemergence of vector-borne diseases from environmental alterations.
寄生虫、媒介和宿主。自然环境的改变可能会改变这些实体相互作用的背景,从而有可能影响媒介传播疾病的流行病学。在本综述中,列举了一些人类驱动的生态变化可能导致媒介传播疾病传播的例子。这些变化包括森林砍伐、农牧业、水利工程、城市化、生物多样性丧失、外来物种引入和气候变化。全球环境目前正以惊人的速度退化,这可能使人类面临越来越大的风险,遭受不必要的、可预防的媒介传播疾病暴发。需要进一步开展研究,以提高我们预测和预防因环境改变而导致媒介传播疾病出现和再次出现的能力。